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Mumbai: India's Test team vice-captain Ajinkya Rahane has donated Rs 10 lakh to the Maharashtra Chief Minister's Relief Fund for the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic.

Rahane joins the list of sportspersons who have contributed towards the fight against the pandemic.

India's Test vice-captain confirmed the news on twitter on Sunday, writing that this was a very small amount in this difficult time. He also requested people to stay home and realise the importance of the lockdown.

Rahane wrote, "This is just my tiny bit and a drop in the ocean. Will do my best to support in this difficult time. Meanwhile stay home stay safe."

Batting maestro Sachin Tendulkar has donated Rs 50 lakh, while former India player Suresh Raina has chipped in with Rs 52 lakh. BCCI, on Saturday, also announced a Rs 51 crore donation to the PM relief fund for the fight against the pandemic.

Maharashtra is one of the worst-affected states battling the novel coronavirus.

With inputs from PTI

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Australia beat New Zealand by seven wickets at the MCG to win their fifth World Cup title on this day in 2015.

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Former England captain Alastair Cook feels this season's county championship should be cancelled if there is no time to hold a meaningful competition, rejecting a possible shortened campaign due to coronavirus outbreak.

After England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) decided that no cricket activities can start in the country before 28 May due to the COVID-19 threat, which has caused the loss of many lives, county championship's start on 12 April has definitely been delayed. As a result, the tournament may see a different format. Cook believes it is better to call off the championship this season because playing like that would not be meaningful.

File image of Alastair Cook. Reuters

In the county championship, 18 first-class clubs compete in three separate competitions.

“Whatever happens, if we do play any sort of cricket which hopefully we will, what I hope is that they don’t try and have a six-game County Championship or something like that. I would rather have one or two full tournaments because if you do then play that tournament or two tournaments it is so much more rewarding to win it," Cook told BBC Radio 5 Live.

The former England opener said that making teams play only three or four games does not serve any purpose to the championship.

“If there is no time for a meaningful County Championship, say [you can only play] three or four games, there is probably not much sense us having it," said Cook.



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Coach Justin Langer last year praised Tim Paine's leadership as "brilliant" and said Steve Smith may not want the "burden" of captaincy on top of batting pressures.

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The BCCI took to twitter to reveal how India batsman Cheteshwar Pujara is spending time at home amid the coronavirus pandemic.

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London: England women's cricket team captain Heather Knight has joined the National Health Service (NHS) as a volunteer to help the healthcare system fight the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom.

File image of England women's cricket captain Heather Knight. Image credit: Twitter/@ICC

File image of England women's cricket captain Heather Knight. Image credit: Twitter/@ICC

The 29-year-old Knight who has played seven Tests, 101 ODIs and 74 T20Is for England will help in transporting medicines and spreading awareness about the pandemic in the United Kingdom, that has reported at least 14,543 cases of the novel coronavirus.

"I signed up to the NHS' volunteer scheme as I have a lot of free time on my hands and I want to help as much as I can," Knight wrote in her column for BBC.

Knight, who returned from Australia after leading England to the semi-finals of the Women's T20 World Cup recently, is now living under the UK's lockdown rules.

"My brother and his partner are doctors, and I have a few friends who work in the NHS, so I know how hard they are working and how difficult it is for everyone," she said.

Besides helping transport medicines, Knight will also speak to people about the importance of self-isolation under the current circumstances.

"One of my close friends, Elin, works on the ward at the Royal Liverpool University Hospital," Knight wrote.

"She is having to make tough decisions, so we are trying to keep her positive. Our university friendship group has been sending her throwback songs of the day to try and give her a moment to be happy and relax."

More than half a million people signed up when the volunteer programme was announced on Wednesday.

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Two years ago, Australian cricket had plunged into its deepest crisis with the ‘Sandpapergate’ drama being played out in the third Test between South Africa and Australia at Cape Town. At that time, critics of the game — the way it is played Down Under — predicted doom for Australian cricket and perhaps an ignominious climb down from its cricketing superpower status.

Under the mentorship of Justin Langer – master of the mind game – and Tim Paine, as skipper, the much-maligned team has now regained its rightful position among the best cricketing nations in the world. Aaron Finch, Australia’s white ball skipper has also contributed to its rapid rise back to the top of the heap.

There is something for sports teams and students of management to learn from the way the Langer-Paine team worked out and implemented the plan to rescue Australian cricket from its worst disaster and to restore its lost honour.

The Langer-Paine

Let’s discuss here the five salient points of Australia’s roadmap to resurgence:

1. Great leaders are inspirational; they aren’t necessarily the best players in the squad — In business, great leaders are usually generalists and not domain experts. Specialist leaders are prone to tell their team members the answer whereas generalists bring their teammates together to find the answer, collectively.

Mike Brearley, the quintessential ‘people manager’, wouldn’t perhaps fit into the England squad of the 1970s as a player but was its legendary skipper. Similarly, Sir Frank Worrell and Richie Benaud certainly weren’t their teams’ best players; they are regarded as all-time great skippers though.

Tim Paine isn’t Australia’s best batsman by a mile. He is an excellent ‘keeper but an average batsman. He is, however, a very good leader of men and somebody who is looked upon as genial and non-controversial. Paine grew up captaining Tasmania in age-group tournaments and was Australia’s Under-19 vice-captain in the 2004 World Cup.

Paine is a man with a soft, friendly exterior but tough as nails from the inside; just the leader Australia needed at a time when they were not only looking to win games but also to be seen to be playing with honesty and integrity.

2. Great leaders have ethics — Both Langer and Paine were concerned about the decent conduct of the Australian players and therefore drew up a code of ethics for the team and called it ‘Elite Honesty’. They were kind, courteous and respectful towards each player and the staff in the squad, besides being good to outsiders too. This rubbed off on their teammates.

Long known for trash talk and sledges, Australian cricketers were, in general, looked upon as arrogant and ill-mannered. Langer informed his players that his team would continue to play the tough Australian way, fight tooth-and-nail but there would be no slurs and abuses. “Banter is acceptable but do not cross the line,” were his orders.

‘Care’ and ‘concern’ for others’ needs is what earned respect for Paine and Langer. In team meetings, both leaders often openly expressed their lack of ability and their mistakes, showing the players that they were in a safe environment and that they were free to err and ask questions too.

In one meeting, in fact, Usman Khawaja telling Langer that his teammates felt intimidated by the coach’s pep-talks and attitude helped the coach mend his ways.

3. Great leaders get the right people on the bus — Jack Welch, GE’s former CEO says, “The team with the best players wins. Therefore surround yourself with the most talented, passionate people available.”

The Langer-Paine combo assured the Australian squad that the best ‘available’ eleven players would enter the ground do battle for the country. When Steve Smith and David Warner – expelled for their misconduct in South Africa – became available to the team having served their ban, they were brought back into the squad straight away.

Langer also requisitioned the services of Ricky Ponting and Steve Waugh, two passionate Aussie legends, to help the Australian squad in its preparations for the ICC World Cup and the Ashes series of 2019. As a leader, he didn’t feel threatened by their presence in the dressing room. Langer knew that both Ponting and Waugh could help his team achieve their goals. Moreover, greats of the past like Adam Gilchrist and others were also invited into the dressing room, from time to time, to talk to his players.

Of course, Langer had his coaching staff to provide him with the technical inputs so necessary at that level.

4. Great leaders ensure that the workplace has a fun working environment — An Australian study of 2,500 employees (St Edward’s University) found that 81 percent of them believed a fun working environment helped make them more productive and 91 percent said that laughing on the job helped reduce work-related stress.

For the Langer mentored squad, the dressing room was a fun place to be in. Players were free to vent their anger, crack jokes, sing or even dance to keep stress to a minimum. The players laughed together – sometimes, they shed tears together too, played pranks and kept the atmosphere in the dressing room as light as possible, without losing focus on the tasks at hand.

The Australians were mentally prepared for the barracking of Smith, Warner and Cameron Bancroft in England during the ICC World Cup and the Ashes series. At the stadiums and during their coach rides, to and from matches, the Australian team laughed off the boos and the tomfoolery that English supporters meted out to them, revealing a high level of self-belief that the players had developed over their 24-month period of resurgence.

Wasn’t it the legend, Michael Jordan who said, “Just play. Have fun. Enjoy the game”?

5. Great leaders respect organisational legacy and culture — The Australian cricket team, since 1876, has won around 45 percent of the Test matches it has played. The team has also won five World Cups, the latest in 2015. “Cricket is the national game of a nation which lives and dies by its sporting prowess,” say the authors of Peak Performance: Business Lessons from the World's Top Sporting Organisations. “Cricket Australia (Previously ACB) operates a fiduciary responsibility on behalf of all Australians, who are the ultimate shareholders of the game.”

Therefore, the ball-tampering scandal in South Africa was a huge letdown for most Australians. It wasn’t surprising then that according to a Roy Morgan Online survey in March 2019, a year after the incident, Australians’ level of distrust in cricket was higher than any other game.

Langer, in his pep-talks, during the two years he has been in charge, kept reminding the players of Australia’s cricketing history and of the legends who have worn the Baggy Green in the country’s 144-year domination of the game. They were constantly told that they were filling the shoes of some giants of the past and therefore had to live up to high expectations.

Langer’s success mantra for cricket is “character over cover drives,” writes Clint Thomas. He, therefore, encourages his players to read about self-development and try out mindfulness techniques.

***

It has been a tough two-year period for Australian cricket. It was on 24 March, 2018 that the trio of Smith, Warner and Bancroft decided to use unfair means to change the condition of the ball, in that Test match at Cape Town. For Langer and Paine, who took over the team after Smith and his accomplices were banned for a year, it was a herculean task, not only to get the team to perform but also to be seen as a team with ethics. They have succeeded, to a large extent, but there’s still work to be done. After reaching the semi-finals of the World Cup in England and then retaining the Ashes, Langer was asked, “What now?” “We start again,” he replied.

***

The author is a caricaturist and sportswriter. A former fast bowler and coach, he believes in calling a spade a spade.



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